REMARKS ON THE CONCEPT OF PICTORIAL SPACE IN ISLAMIC PAINTING
Journal Name:
- Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi Mimarlık Fakültesi Dergisi
Keywords (Original Language):
Author Name |
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Abstract (2. Language):
The pictorial treatment of space in Islamic miniature painting is a subject that
has largely remained undiscussed (2). Since naturalism is not a pictorial priority
in these paintings, which are essentially two-dimensional, the representation of
space appeared to many as an irrelevant problem. Historians of Islamic art
accepted too readily the idea that the prohibition of images in Islamic culture
crucially determined the two-dimensionality of pictorial representations (3).
While this observation has a historical base, the conclusions automatically
derived from it (that a pictorial representation of space was not feasible and that
whatever the Muslim painter did pertained to the surface and remained, therefore,
decorative) are not tenable. Moreover, this idea only helps to explain why
Muslim painters would stay within a two-dimensional pictorial system, but it is
unable to explain how their two-dimensional system was constructed, and how
it was developed as an alternative realm of pictorial representation. Although it
remains outside the scope of this paper to discuss them, the 'orientalist' underpinnings
of this reluctance to study the Islamic miniatures as an alternative
pictorial system can be mentioned at this point (4). A close reading of writings on Islamic painting reveals a quasi-unanimous
assumption that pictorial coherence can only be achieved with linear perspective.
It is necessary to distance ourselves from these assumptions and to examine more
critically the question of pictorial space, if we wish to understand the pictorial
qualities of Islamic painting.
The way we perceive pictorially represented space today is dominated by the
visual logic of linear perspective, or in other words, by the close relation it has
established between pictorial space and our visual perception. Space itself being
nothing else but a void that surrounds the objects, its illusionistic representation
depends on the pictorial replication of the precise geometrical relations of
objects in reference to the viewer's eye, so that they can be identified with a direct
experience and knowledge of spatial relations. To achieve this effect, linear
perspective approximately replicates the human vision through a rigorous
geometrical construction comparable to a central projection with the viewer's
eye as its center of projection.
The resulting pictorial space is a geometrically continuous and measurable
unit of the actual space and the objects contained in it. It is through its absolute
dependence on the position of the viewer's eye that the perspectival pictorial
space acquires an enclosing character and an illusionistic depth (5). The
geometric vigor, the illusionistic efficiency, and the compositional coherence
of representation all rely on the single viewpoint according to which a
perspectival painting is conceived. Besides its practical necessity, the single
viewpoint has a very important symbolic implication: It is an absolute point
of reference that establishes the vision of a unique viewer as a representational
priority (6).
In Islamic miniatures objects depicted without reference to a single viewpoint
cancel out the possibility of representing space as an illusion of depth, yet the
intelligibility of pictorial space need not depend on that illusion. As Coomaraswamy
pointed out,
Space (...) has to be taken as a primary datum of intelligence, and it is
obvious that as soon as it became possible to make intelligible representations
of objects, it must have been taken for granted by those who
understood them that these were representations of objects existing
in space (1956,147).
The notion of pictorial space as an illusionistic depth is intimately linked to a
very particular understanding of the picture surface. In Western painting tradition
from Renaissance onward until the revolution of Modern painting, the
picture surface was conceived not as a positive entity but as a visually dissolved
one, comparable to a 'transparent window'. Alberti's definition of the picture
surface as the 'intersection of the pyramid of the visual rays' not only explains its
geometrical significance and its role in linear perspective construction, but also
points out that in order to realize a perspectival pictorial space the picture
surface dissappears or becomes transparent (7).
An expression of the planar character of the picture surface, as found in Islamic
painting, is obviously incompatible with the illusionistic representation of space,
a convention that dominated Western painting until the turn of the century. If
this convention of the Post-Renaissance painting is taken for granted by someone
who studies Islamic art, it is normal that all the features that seem to emphasize
or to confirm the flatness of the picture plane should be seen as preventing
pictorial space from emerging. Yet pictorial space cannot be held identical with
illusionistic space; some of the alternative approaches that can be found in non-Western painting traditions offered a rich source of inspiration to the
avant-gardes who revolutionized the Western painting in the early-twentieth
century and defined the pictorial space in a much broader way.
Before discussing what kind of a pictorial space was realized in Islamic painting,
one last point concerning another aspect of the represented space in the Renaissance
painting needs to be noted. The illusion of coherently receding depth on
a flat surface was successfully created only at some expense: In Renaissance
painting, the infinite character of space is paradoxically confined within the
spatial unit of the picture. Infinity, where all parallel lines are imagined to meet,
corresponds to a precise point in tfie picture, that is to the vanishing point, which
was often dissimulated by the painters (8). All orthogonals in the picture plane
converge toward that point and, hence, define the visual limits of the pictorial
space (9). Since the precise location of the vanishing point on the picture plane
is geometrically determined in reference to the viewer's location, this point
becomes, so to say, the symmetrical counterpoint to the viewer's eye: The infinite
space finds itself unified and contained within the gaze of a single viewer.
In contrast to this paradox in Western painting, it can be argued that Islamic and
Chinese painting achieve more directly the suggestion of an unlimited space.
Because of the absence of a single vanishing point in their conceptions, the
non-perspectival paintings of Islamic or Chinese art are capable to suggest more
directly the infinite quality of space, even though their representation of space
remains much less tangible.
As a consequence, the relationship of the pictorial space with the picture surface
is also entirely different. Despite the different concepts of space İn these two
painting traditions, the equivalence between the picture surface and the pictorial
space is common to both of them. The representation of space is achieved within
the limits of the picture surface, that is, within its two-dimensionality, and the
pictorial space depends more on intellectual abstraction than on sensory illusion.
Wilfrid H. Wells suggested that in Chinese painting, the picture plane did not
have an optic existence except where it was appropriated and converted into
surface by depicted objects; in other words, despite its solid material existence,
the unpainted support (paper, silk, etc.) was not conceived by the Chinese artist
in its entirety as a picture plane (10). Hence, where it was left untouched by paint,
the support suggested the negative presence of space, and paint, in contrast,
suggested the material existence of the objects.
In Islamic miniatures, in plain opposition to this practice observed in Chinese
painting, the entire support is painted, that is, appropriated and converted into
a picture surface. The use of color applied in large patches, sometimes uniformly
spread and sometimes interspersed with minute allover patterns, over large
sections of the composition is not the consequence of a decorative approach to
painting as it is often considered (11).
Indeed, the valorization of objects, figures, and various surfaces (which may stand
for the ground, floor, walls, ceiling, or the sky) as painted surfaces suggests a
particular kind of pictorial space in which, flattened and equalized in visual
terms, solids and voids become pictorially homogenous. Even where the threedimensionality
of an object is expressed through an axonometric form, the equal
treatment of line and coloring throughout the painting establishes a unified
order. Neither the representation of solids, nor that of the voids dominates the
pictorial composition, something which is masterfully exemplified by a late
fifteenth-century miniature from the Herat School (Figure 1). In Islamic miniatures this pictorial equivalence of solids and voids suggested by
a common two-dimensionality and stressed through paint is furthermore
strengthened by the avoidance of a unified viewpoint for the entire composition.
One can always notice the presence of more than one viewpoint adopted to depict
the different parts or elements of the composition. Depicted objects that cannot
be unified in the sight of a single viewer cancel a unique perception of a depicted
space; in other words, space cannot be derived from the order of objects seen at
once, but it has to be explored pictorially.
This can be achieved by shifting our gaze, to look at the objects depicted with
respect to different viewpoints. The pictorially required shift of viewing direction,
therefore, not only underlines the significance of the individual parts of the
composition, but also suggests that these objects are seen from different angles
in space. Thus, by its very structure depending on multiple viewpoints, the
two-dimensional miniature painting represents space by implication of movement.
The representation of space through movement may sound paradoxical, given
the somehow rigid or frozen poses in which figures are often drawn in miniatures.
The movement we are speaking of is, however, not related to an illusionistic
pictorial structure, but rather to a virtual one, and it is often sustained by the
narrative composition. The particular arrangement of figures along a spiral
curve, which Alexandre Papadopoulo (1976) discerned İn a great number of
miniatures and considered as an enhancement of the narrative (as it gradually
leads our attention to the central figure of the story) is also a very suitable
compositional structure for suggesting space through movement, that is, a space
compatible with the two-dimensional character of the representation: The movement
suggested by such a spiral arrangement is parallel to the picture plane and
does not attempt to pierce it (12). This seems also to be the opinion of Erzcn
(1991,10-12), who characterizes the pictorial space of miniatures as 'equivalent
at all points in terms of experiential distance' and notes the two-dimensional
conception of miniatures at the same time as their 'radial composition revolving
around a center'.
Some authors have identified a similar suggestion of virtual movement in pictorial
space in axonometric views, especially in those representing buildings.
Here also the objects invite the viewer's eye to move around the depicted object
(Bois, 1979, 264; Comar, 1992, 63). However, while axonometric drawings suggest
a more easily intelligible movement that follows a continuous path around
the object, they still relate to a single, even though impersonal, or virtually
non-existing viewpoint, which corresponds to a vanishing point sent back to an
infinite distance. The miniatures, on the other hand, suggest a more complex and
fragmented movement in pictorial space, as they incorporate multiple viewpoints.
Axonometric forms can also be encountered in Islamic miniatures. Yet this
occasional use of axonometric drawing which reveals the three-dimensional
aspect of an object, should not be seen as an incomplete attempt to create the
illusion of depth. The use of an axonometric form is more likely to related to a
desire of clearly explaining a particular shape, such as the hexagonal pavilion or
its three-sided bay window in Figure 1. Moreover, an axonometric form does
neither suggest a privileged viewpoint, nor a precise vanishing point for the entire
picture, and therefore, it can very well be accommodated within a miniature
composition that already incorporates many other viewpoints. Even the isolated
perspective views that we find in the early-seventeenth-century miniatures of the Ottoman painter Ahmet Nakşi can be attributed to the principle of multiple viewpoints (Figure 2) (13). Although these perspective views seen through
windows and gateways suggest an illusionistic depth and render Nakşi's composition
somewhat eclectic and ambiguous, they remain isolated views and do not
disturb the pictorial composition based on multiple viewpoints.
If we consider the conception of pictorial space as tied to the picture surface in
Islamic painting, we must note that this conception is most strikingly expressed
by the coincidence of all depicted surfaces such as floors, walls, ceilings, and
canopies with the picture plane itself. The spatiality of these surfaces is transformed
into a flatness on which all other solids appear to be floating. Hence, the
flat picture surface becomes an abstract equivalent of the actual space.
On the basis of such a pictorial treatment of space and objects, it might be
appropriate to conclude that in Islamic painting, space is primarily conceived as
defined by the surfaces that suggest its limits. Unlike the pictorial space of a
perspectival picture, the pictorial space suggested in miniatures does not enclose
or unite the objects, but rather remains indifferent to them. In other words, here
the pictorial expression of space does not depend on the depiction of objects, as
it is the case in a perspectival picture where the precise geometry of depicted
objects constitutes the illusionistic space.
SeyyedH. Nasr's (1972) remarks on a concept of cosmicspace, predominant in Islam,
seem to offer a further elaboration on this observation. Nasr remarks that:
Cosmic space is defined in relation to the inner surface of the outermost
sphere rather than by any positive object such as the earth or the
planets. Space is, as it were, carved out from the plenum of cosmic
creation and is conceived with respect to a surface that surrounds it
rather than an object which it surrounds (Nasr, 1972,118-119) (Italics
mine).
Nasr suggests that this conception of'negative space', that is, a space determined not
by the objectfs) it encloses but by the surfaces that surround it (them), also characterizes
the designs of Islamic buildings, gardens, and cities.
The significance of the surrounding surface in the conception of space may also
explain why in Islamic miniatures the pictorial space is intimately linked to a
picture surface stressed with paint and pattern rather than to a surface left blank,
as in Chinese paintings. The conceptual link between space and its surrounding
surfaces may then explain why pictorial space realized on a two-dimensional
surface remains intelligible.
Being conceived as a stressed surface rather than a visually dissolved one, the
Islamic pictorial space allows its viewers an intellectual viewing distance. We may
gain an insight into how this pictorial space works visually and intellectually by
looking at a very special example that brings the actual and the represented space
together in an architectural composition. A ceramic tile panel, at the entrance
to the bedroom pavilion of Murad III in the Topkapi Palace, bears the image of
a garden seen through a two-bay arcade, in a nearly one-to-one scale, and
proposes a pictorial space the meaning of which depended on its precise location
in the architectural environment (Figure 3) (14). At the time of its construction in 1578-79, the royal pavilion, consisting of a
domed hall and its ante-chamber, overlooked the Golden Horn and commanded
one of the most attractive panoramas of Istanbul. The tile panel that concerns
us must have been moved in mid-seventeenth century to its present location, on
the wall of another pavilion that protrudes into the ante-chamber of Murad Ill's bedroom pavilion (15). This arcade is only a fragment, yet one can easily imagine
that a larger arcade composition once covered either an interior wall of the
ante-chamber (16) or the exterior of its entrance facade (17). In any case, the
arcade composition picks up its theme from an actual arcaded gallery that led to
the entrance of the pavilion (18). As the pavilion itself, also this gallery enjoyed
the same charming view of the cityscape and the palace gardens lying just below.
The depicted arcade segment and the imaginary garden seen through it share the
same flatness. Despite the fact that the depicted arcade acts as a frame, the space
seen through it is filled with fantastic floral compositions that stress the surface
without suggesting any depth (19). Although this represented view can somehow
be expanded by the viewer's imagination, it cannot be visually perceived as an
expansion of the viewer's own space, as a perspectival view would be. Here the
viewer can only be reminded of a spring garden, to which the royal pavilion itself
is compared by various inscriptions it bears (Necipoğlu, 199İ, 167, 170). The
pictorial space in this representation, realized on a ceramic revetment on a
magnified scale, is not different in its essence from that realized in miniatures. It
is a pictorial space that does not depend on an illusion of depth to be intelligible.
The efficiency of this two-dimensional pictorial space lies both in its imaginary
and concrete qualities. By not suggesting spatial depth, which would have corresponded
to an enclosed finite spatial unit, this representation opts for an
infinitely expanding space of an imaginary garden, perhaps that of the Paradise,
which nevertheless remains sensible and enjoyable thanks to the concreteness of
its surface stressed by a powerful pattern.
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Abstract (Original Language):
İslam minyatürlerinde mekanın nasıl tasvir edildiği genellikle tartışılmamıştır.
Özde iki boyutlu olan ve naturalizmi amaçlamayan bu resimlerde, mekan tasvirinin
konu dışı kaldığı yargısı yerleşmiş gözükmektedir. Sanal tarihçileri, İslam
resminde görülen iki boyutluluğun tasvir yasağından kaynaklandığı görüşünde
birleşirler. Bu görüş, kısmen de olsa, tarihsel bir gerçeğe dayanmakla birlikte,
sanatçının ancak neden iki boyutlu bir tasvir sistemi içinde çalıştığını açıklar;
fakat bu sistemin nasıl kurulduğu ve hangi açılardan farklı bir tasvir seçeneği
oluşturduğu sorusunu cevapsız bırakır. İslam resim sanatı hakkındaki yazılarda
mekan tasvirine değinilmemesinin asıl nedeni, bunun ancak doğrusal perspektifle
tutarlı bir biçimde sağlanabileceğinin varsayılmasıdır. Bu yazıda, perspektif
yöntemiyle gerçekleştirilen mekan tasvirinin özellikleri ve anlamı ile İslam
minyatürlerinde mekan tasvirinin nasıl ele alındığı konularına değinilmekte,
özellikle her iki resim sisteminde resimsel mekanın nasıl bir resim düzlemi
kavrayışına göre gerçekleştiği incelenmektedir. Resim düzlemi kavramına
açıklık getirmek amacıyla Çin resim sanatında mekan tasvirinin bazı yönlerine
de kısaca değinilmektedir.
Perspektifle mekan yanılsaması (illüzyon), mekan içinde yer alan cisimlerin
birbirleriyle olan geometrik ilişkilerinin kesin olarak tek bir bakış açısına göre
resmedilmeleriyle gerçekleştirilir. Tasvirin mekan yanılsamasını yaratmadaki
etkinliği ve kompozisyon açısından tutarlılığı, hep bu tek bakış noktası üzerinde
odaklaşmasından ileri gelir. Tek bakış noktası, basit bir pratik gereklilikten öte,
bir simgesel değer taşır: bir tek kişinin görüş şekli öncelik kazanmış ve mutlak
referans noktası haline gelmiştir.
İslam minyatürleri cisimleri tek bir bakış açısından resmetmedikleri için,
mekanın bir derinlik yanılsaması biçiminde tasvirine imkan vermezler. Ama,
resimsel mekanın anlaşılabilirliği mutlaka bir derinlik yanılsaması olarak tasvir
edilmesine bağlı değildir.
Resimsel mekanın bir derinlik yanılsaması olarak anlaşılması, Rönesans ile Batı
resim sanatında yerleşen ve ancak Modern resim sanatının değiştirdiği, özel bir
resim yüzeyi kavrayışına dayanır. Bu kavrayışa göre, resim yüzeyi kendisi olarak
varolmaz; mekan yanılsamasının gerçekleşebilmesi için adeta bir pencere gibi
saydamlaşmıştır. İslam resminde ise resim yüzeyinin düzlemsel niteliği
olabildiğince ifade edilir.
Rönesans resim sanatında, resim düzlemine rağmen mekan yanılsaması başarıyla
sağlanırken, mekanın önemli bir niteliği olan sonsuzluğu, resmin mekansal
birimi içine hapsedilir: resim düzlemine dik paralellerin buluştuğu kaçış noktası,
resim düzlemi üzerinde somut bir nokta haline gelmiştir ve tasvir edilmiş
bulunan mekanın sınırını tanımlar. Buna karşın, tek bir kaçış noktasına göre
tasarlanmamış İslam ve Çin resimleri, mekanı resimsel olarak daha az
tanımlamakla beraber, sonsuzluğunu daha net bir biçimde ifade ederler. Bu
durum, her iki resim sanatında resim yüzeyinin Batı resminden başka türlü
kavranışıyla yakından ilgilidir. Çin resminde resim yüzeyi tümüyle bir resim
düzlemi sayılmaz, ancak çeşitli objeleri tasvir etmek üzere boyanmış noktalar
resim düzlemi olarak algılanır; boyanmadan bırakılmış alan, cisimleri kuşatan
sonsuz mekanın boşluğuna karşılıktır. İslam resminde ise resim yüzeyi tümüyle boyanarak bir resim düzlemine dönüştürülür. Bu düzlem içinde, tüm cisimler ve
yüzeyler eşdeğerdedir ve oluşturulan resimsel mekan içinde tasvir edilen cisim
ve boşluklar aynı biçimde yassılaşır ve görsel olarak eşitlenir.
İslam minyatürlerinde cisim ve boşlukların böyle bir resimsel eşdeğerlilik içinde
ifadesi, tüm kompozisyonu birleştiren tek bir bakış noktasının olmayışryla da
güçlenir. Farklı cisimlerin farklı bakış noktalarına göre resmedilmiş olması, hem
her bir cismin kompozisyon elemanı olarak taşıdığı önemi vurgular, hem de bu
cisimlere, mekan içinde dolaşılarak, değişik yerlerden bakılmış olduğunu ifade
eder. Dolayısıyla, İslam minyatüründe iki boyutlu resim mekanı hareketin
imasıyla da tanımlanmış olur. Bu hareket, özellikle binaların resmedildiği aksonometrik
çizimlerde olduğu gibi, gözü cisimlerin etrafında dolaşmaya davet
eder.
Aksonometrik bir form olarak tasvir edilmiş cisimleri minyatürlerde de bulmak
mümkündür. Bazı cisimlerin böyle resmedilmiş olması, resme bir derinlik verme
çabasından çok, üç boyutlu şekillerini açıklama endişesine dayanır ve bu tasvirler
öncelikli bir bakış noktası önermedikleri için, zaten birçok bakış noktası içeren
resim düzeni içine rahatlıkla yerleşirler.
İslam resminde, mekan tasvirinin resim yüzeyine bağlı olarak kavranışı, en
çarpıcı biçimde yer, döşeme, duvar, tavan, gölgelik vb. resmedilmiş tüm yüzey
nitelikli öğelerin resim düzlemiyle çakışmasında göze çarpar. Bu yüzeylerin
mekansallığı, cisimlerin üzerinde yüzdüğü bir düzlüğe dönüşmüş ve böylece
resim yüzeyi gerçek mekanın soyut bir karşılığı olmuştur. Denilebilir ki, İslam
resminde mekan, onu sınırlayan yüzeylerin tarif ettiği bir şey olarak algılanmıştır.
Perspektife uygun mekan tasvirinin aksine, minyatürlerdeki mekan, cisimleri
kuşatarak birleştirmez, tersine, cisimlere tarafsız kalır. Seyyid H. Nasr'm dile
getirdiği, İslam'da kozmik mekanın, çevrelediği cisimlerden çok, çevrelendiği
yüzeyler yardımıyla kavrandığı düşüncesi de, resimdeki bu durumu destekler
görünmektedir.
Mekanın kavranışında, mekanı çevreleyen yüzeylerin önemi, belki İslam resminde
mekan tasvirinin neden (Çin resminin aksine) renk ve desenle
vurgulanmış bir resim yüzeyine sıkı sıkıya bağlı olduğunu da açıklayabilir.
Böylece, mekanla iki boyutlu bir yüzeyde gerçekleştirilmiş resimsel mekan
arasındaki kavramsal bağ da anlaşılabilir hale gelir.
Görsel olarak çözülmüş bir resim düzlemi yerine, yüzey oluşu vurgulanmış bir
resim düzlemine bağlı olarak kavranan mekan tasviri seyredenlere zihinsel bir
bakış mesafesi de sunar. Böyle bir mekan tasvirinin görsel ve zihinsel olarak nasıl
bir etki amaçladığını, Topkapı Sarayı'ndaki bir çini pano çok iyi örneklemektedir.
Resimsel mekanın panonun yer aldığı mimari mekanla olan ilgisi, mekan
tasvirinin temelde nasıl kavrandığını anlamamıza yardım eder.
III. Murat'ın yatak odası köşkü girişinde bulunan bu çini panoda, neredeyse
birebir ölçekte, iki kemerden oluşan bir revak ve ardında görünen bir bahçe tasvir
edilmiştir. Orijinal konumunda, köşk niteliğindeki binanın muhtemelen giriş
cephesinde yer almış bulunan bu kompozisyon, o dönemde giriş kapısına kadar
uzanan, revaklı bir galerinin devamı olarak tasarlanmış gözükmektedir. Köşk,
İstanbul'un en muhteşem manzaralarından birine yöneltilmiş olup revaklı galeri
de aynı manzaraya ve aşağıda yer alan saray bahçesine bakmaktadır.
Çini pano üzerindeki revak parçası ve ötesinde yer alan bahçe aynı resim
düzlemini paylaşırlar. Revak bir çerçeve oluşturduğu halde, buradan görünen
mekan, çini resim yüzeyini vurgulayan ve derinlik ifadesine yer vermeyen, düşsel çiçek motifleriyle süslenmiştir. Bu biçimde resmedilen mekanı zihinde genişletmek
mümkündür, fakat içinde bulunulan mimari mekanın doğrudan bir uzantısı
olarak algılamak söz konusu değildir. Kompozisyona bakan kişi ancak bir bahar
bahçesini düşleyebilir (ki köşk de, kitabelerinde böyle bir bahçeye benzetilmektedir).
İki boyutlu bu resimsel mekanın etkinliği hem somut hem de düşsel
niteliklerinden kaynaklanmaktadır. Çini üzerindeki kompozisyon bize,
sınırlanmış bir mekan birimi anlamına gelecek optik bir yanılsama önermeden,
zihinsel anlamda sonsuza uzanan, düşsel ama aynı zamanda güçlü bir desenle
vurgulanmış somut bir yüzey olarak karşımızda durur ve gerçek bina, bahçe ve
kent mekamyla ancak yanyana olmak sebebiyle bütünleşen bir mekan tasviri
sunar.
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